Beyond Point Masses. II. Non-Keplerian Shape Effects Are Detectable in Several TNO Binaries
Author:
Proudfoot Benjamin C. N.ORCID, Ragozzine Darin A.ORCID, Thatcher Meagan L.ORCID, Grundy WillORCID, Spencer Dallin J.ORCID, Alailima Tahina M., Allen Sawyer, Bowden Penelope C., Byrd Susanne, Camacho Conner D.ORCID, Campbell Gibson H., Carlisle Edison P., Christensen Jacob A., Christensen Noah K., Clement Kaelyn, Derieg Benjamin J.ORCID, Dille Mara K., Dorrett Cristian, Ellefson Abigail L., Fleming Taylor S., Freeman N. J., Gibson Ethan J., Giforos William G.ORCID, Guerrette Jacob A., Haddock Olivia, Hammond S. Ashton, Hampson Zachary A., Hancock Joshua D., Harmer Madeline S., Henderson Joseph R., Jensen Chandler R., Jensen David, Jensen Ryleigh E., Jones Joshua S., Kubal Cameron C., Lunt Jacob N., Martins Stephanie, Matheson McKenna, Maxwell Dahlia, Morrell Timothy D., Myckowiak McKenna M., Nelsen Maia A.ORCID, Neu Spencer T., Nuccitelli Giovanna G., Reardon Kayson M., Reid Austin S., Richards Kenneth G., Robertson Megan R. W., Rydalch Tanner D., Scoresby Conner B., Scott Ryan L., Shakespear Zacory D.ORCID, Silveira Elliot A., Steed Grace C., Suggs Christiana Z., Suggs Garrett D., Tobias Derek M., Toole Matthew L., Townsend McKayla L., Vickers Kade L., Wagner Collin R., Wright Madeline S., Zappala Emma M. A.
Abstract
Abstract
About 40 trans-Neptunian binaries (TNBs) have fully determined orbits with about 10 others being solved except for breaking the mirror ambiguity. Despite decades of study, almost all TNBs have only ever been analyzed with a model that assumes perfect Keplerian motion (e.g., two point masses). In reality, all TNB systems are non-Keplerian due to nonspherical shapes, possible presence of undetected system components, and/or solar perturbations. In this work, we focus on identifying candidates for detectable non-Keplerian motion based on sample of 45 well-characterized binaries. We use MultiMoon, a non-Keplerian Bayesian inference tool, to analyze published relative astrometry allowing for nonspherical shapes of each TNB system’s primary. We first reproduce the results of previous Keplerian fitting efforts with MultiMoon, which serves as a comparison for the non-Keplerian fits and confirms that these fits are not biased by the assumption of a Keplerian orbit. We unambiguously detect non-Keplerian motion in eight TNB systems across a range of primary radii, mutual orbit separations, and system masses. As a proof of concept for non-Keplerian fitting, we perform detailed fits for (66652) Borasisi-Pabu, possibly revealing a J
2 ≈ 0.44, implying Borasisi (and/or Pabu) may be a contact binary or an unresolved compact binary. However, full confirmation of this result will require new observations. This work begins the next generation of TNB analyses that go beyond the point mass assumption to provide unique and valuable information on the physical properties of TNBs with implications for their formation and evolution.
Funder
Space Telescope Science Institute NASA ∣ SMD ∣ Planetary Science Division
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Cited by
1 articles.
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